All- American led last Wooden team to NCAA championship
LOS ANGELES — Dave Meyers, the star forward who led UCLA to the 1975 NCAA basketball championship as the lone senior in coach John Wooden’s final season and later played for the NBA’s Milwaukee Bucks, died Friday. He was 62.
Mr. Meyers died at his home in Temecula after struggling with cancer for the last year, according to UCLA, which received the news from his younger sister, Ann Meyers Drysdale.
He played four years for Milwaukee after being drafted second overall by the Los Angeles Lakers. Shortly after, Mr. Meyers was part of a blockbuster trade that sent him to the Bucks in exchange for Kareem Abdul- Jabbar.
At 6- foot- 8, Mr. Meyers led UCLA in scoring at 18.3 points and rebounding at 7.9 in his final season, helping the Bruins to a 28- 3 record. He had 24 points and 11 rebounds in their 92- 85 victory over Kentucky in the NCAA title game played in his hometown of San Diego.
Meyers Drysdale also played at UCLA during her Hall of Fame career.
Mr. Meyers assumed the Bruins’ leadership role during the 1974- 75 season after Bill Walton and Jamaal Wilkes had graduated. Playing with sophomores Marques Johnson and Richard Washington, Mr. Meyers earned consensus All- America honors. Mr. Meyers made the cover of Sports Illustrated after the Bruins won the NCAA title.
“One of the true warriors in @ UCLAMBB history has gone on to glory,” Johnson wrote on Twitter. “Dave Meyers was our Captain in ’ 75 and as tenacious a player ever. RIP.”
Johnson recalled in other tweets how Mr. Meyers called him ‘ MJB’ or Marques Johnson Baby when he was a freshman, and later in the NBA, Mr. Meyers was nicknamed “Crash” because he was always diving on the floor for loose balls.
In 1975, Mr. Meyers, along with Elmore Smith, Junior Bridgeman and Brian Winters, was traded to Milwaukee for Abdul- Jabbar and WaltWesley.
Born David William Meyers, he was one of 11 children. He averaged 22.7 points as a senior at Sonora High in La Habra, California.
Mr. Meyers made a surprise announcement in 1980 that he was retiring from basketball to spend more time with his family. He later earned his teaching certificate and taught sixth grade for several years in Lake Elsinore, California.
He is survived by his wife, Linda, whom he married in 1975, and daughter Crystal and son Sean.